davesisk
Platinum Member
Hey guys:
I was just thinking (uh oh! /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif)...
I'm forming a mental image of this contraption that is somewhat like a pallet jack, only the wheels are large and on the outside of the frame. Think a big squared U-shape lying flat on the ground, wide enough to fit around a pallet. Large outdoor wheels are on the outside of the frame (probably one on each side near the top of the U, and 1-2 on the bottom of the U, very similar to a manual pallet jack). Inside the frame are pallet forks that are attached to a large vertical hydraulic cylinder, which would connect to the auxillary hydraulic circuit via the quick-connects. So, you could raise and lower the pallet forks from the seat of the PT using the aux hydraulics (or the selector valve in my case). At the bottom of the U just behind the wheels would be the attachment plate. Since it's on wheels and can roll, you'd push or pull it with the PT much like you'd drive a big wagon or trailer with wheels at both front and back. Are you getting a mental picture in your heads?
So, essentially, you could push this contraption up to a pallet loaded with heavy material (like in 3000-4000 pounds or more), position the lowered forks underneath the pallet, with the aux hydraulics you'd raise the pallet, then you could push or pull the pallet with PT. I'd say the lift height should be pretty minimal...a bunch of weight up high would be awefully dangerous.
Not knocking the PT pallet forks at all, but in my case I could only pick up a 600 lb pallet or so. With a sturdy enough frame and a large bore hydraulic cylinder, this thing could pick up several tons, like a pallet of bricks, retaining wall blocks, slate, etc.
I've been able to push a pallet loaded with bricks on my concrete driveway (going in the direction that has a slight downhill incline). I wonder how much weight the PT could push if the weight was on wheels? Probably quite a lot I imagine (there is an airplane tow adapter, right?)
What do you guys think? This would take some heavy materials, but it really doesn't sound like it'd be too hard to build.
L8r!
Dave
I was just thinking (uh oh! /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif)...
I'm forming a mental image of this contraption that is somewhat like a pallet jack, only the wheels are large and on the outside of the frame. Think a big squared U-shape lying flat on the ground, wide enough to fit around a pallet. Large outdoor wheels are on the outside of the frame (probably one on each side near the top of the U, and 1-2 on the bottom of the U, very similar to a manual pallet jack). Inside the frame are pallet forks that are attached to a large vertical hydraulic cylinder, which would connect to the auxillary hydraulic circuit via the quick-connects. So, you could raise and lower the pallet forks from the seat of the PT using the aux hydraulics (or the selector valve in my case). At the bottom of the U just behind the wheels would be the attachment plate. Since it's on wheels and can roll, you'd push or pull it with the PT much like you'd drive a big wagon or trailer with wheels at both front and back. Are you getting a mental picture in your heads?
So, essentially, you could push this contraption up to a pallet loaded with heavy material (like in 3000-4000 pounds or more), position the lowered forks underneath the pallet, with the aux hydraulics you'd raise the pallet, then you could push or pull the pallet with PT. I'd say the lift height should be pretty minimal...a bunch of weight up high would be awefully dangerous.
Not knocking the PT pallet forks at all, but in my case I could only pick up a 600 lb pallet or so. With a sturdy enough frame and a large bore hydraulic cylinder, this thing could pick up several tons, like a pallet of bricks, retaining wall blocks, slate, etc.
I've been able to push a pallet loaded with bricks on my concrete driveway (going in the direction that has a slight downhill incline). I wonder how much weight the PT could push if the weight was on wheels? Probably quite a lot I imagine (there is an airplane tow adapter, right?)
What do you guys think? This would take some heavy materials, but it really doesn't sound like it'd be too hard to build.
L8r!
Dave